A friend of mine picked up on the way the RUPA survey suggested that Australia should either go it alone or pursue a Trans-Tasman comp and wrote to them directly to ask whether a domestic competition would really be financially viable. Apparently RUPA told him that they think a domestic competition would be more commercially viable in the long term.
I guess, if we could somehow up-skill and make our teams more competitive, then a Trans-Tasman comp could be quite exciting and mutually beneficial after the current broadcast deal ends in 2020.
But one of the problems with a Trans-Tasman comp, if we fail to up-skill fast enough, is that constantly being beaten by NZ teams does not help gain media attention and build a larger fan base in Australia, etc.
This is one reason why going it alone (at least for a spell) could be more attractive (assuming it really is financially viable). The benefits that come with teams winning would stay within Oz and help build rugby here. The ARU could put Australian rugby first in a way that is directly obvious to fans.
So just trying to think outside the box for 2020 onwards, I reckon something like this could be a bit exciting:
March-May: A revamped NRC* with all the test players available
May-June: State of Origin involving a real NSW Waratahs, Queensland Reds, and a ‘Best of the Rest’ representative team.
June: Offer the winner of State of Origin to play the winner of Super Rugby or any other such champion from whatever competition that exists at that time.
July: Inbound Tests
August-October: the Rugby Championship
November: End of Year Tour
*The revamped NRC could include the following teams:
ACT Brumbies
Western Force
Melbourne Rebels
+
2-3 teams created by the NSWRU
2 teams created by the QRU
I haven’t suggested what a ‘third tier’ could look like during July-October, but I reckon a set-up like this would suit fans in Oz, with all the pathways being kept alive. It also provides a mixed-bag of goodies for the broadcasters.
The ‘Best of the Rest’ team in State of Origin would work because it’s not a regular team playing week in and week out without a home. It would be a select representative team made up of the best players outside of NSW and Qld (there are other such equivalent teams that work in other sports).
The end result would be: Australia would have a national domestic comp with the best players available. It would have a great State of Origin concept. And the winning State of Origin team would have the potential opportunity to play the best team from another top level competition each year.
The other SANZAAR countries could establish a similar set-up if they wanted to, or continue with a form of Super Rugby. But whatever happens, Australia would be attempting to do what’s best for Australia, and take charge of its own future.
^^^^^^ THIS
THIS x1000
More Aussie games. 8 teams - 4 games/wk, in a time zone we can watch, an Aussie team to win every week and at the end. Would get more passion in the final than, e.g Sharks vs Brumbies 2004. Can anyone name a Sharks player from then? I can still name most of the Raiders and about half of Balmain from the epic 1989 final, and I hate league. A bit of a SOO flavor after the regular season.
More opportunities for players - instead of being sheltered in extended squads - but also coaches and refs. Better exposure for sponsors. Do you think Gallagher (sponsors of the Chiefs) get good value when they play in SA?
Start small, 8 teams, and grow it like the A-League. Cities are lining up to be the next A-League team. Canberra's enclosed stadium will only be
built if they get a team. Why? Because soccer is
popular. Wasn't always that way, look at what happened to the NSL. People don't care that the Soccerroos aren't as good as Germany or Brazil, that we don't have a hope in hell of winning the next world cup. People don't care that we aren't the top test team in cricket - we have been no 3 for a while. BBL is going great.
So the question is - do we pander to SANZAAR by:
- Giving up on the West, and all the promise that their exellent development programs show? Hand it on a platter to League?
- Do we cull the Rebels, and cut off the second largest market in Australia?
- Do we shaft the most successful professional-era provincial team in Australia?
All to chase some future pay-day from asian TV by supporting the Sunwolves, or to make do on a promise from the RWC 2007 to better support Argentina?
We should go it alone. Commit to the breakdown. Confidence is key.